Ms. Goodman has a BA in History & Art History, and a Masters in Library and Information Studies
both from McGill University, and has done graduate work in Jewish history at Concordia
University as part of the MA in Judaic Studies degree program, where she focused Medieval & Modern
Judaism and her thesis focused on American Jewish History & Southern Jewish History, particularly
Jews life during the Civil War. She also has a DCS in Communications, with an emphasis on the
Fine Arts from Vanier College.

Ms. Goodman had contributed to the news sections of Military History and Vietnam Magazines, and was also the former Editor/Features Editor for the History News Network (HNN), and had
worked for HNN from 2004-2010.

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Full Text Campaign Buzz May 24, 2012: President Barack Obama Accuses Mitt Romney of ‘Cow-Pie Distortion’ on Debt, Deficits in Campaign Speech at the Iowa State Fairgrounds

CAMPAIGN 2012

CAMPAIGN BUZZ 2012

POLITICAL QUOTES & SPEECHES

On his first visit back to the Iowa state fairgrounds since the 2008 campaign, President Obama Thursday night used a grassroots rally to launch sharp new attacks against rival Mitt Romney over the debt and deficit and vigorously defend his own handling of the same.

The venue holds symbolic value for Democrats because it was here in August that Romney made his now-famous declaration that “corporations are people, my friend.”

Obama thrust the Republican candidate’s unflattering moment front and center early on….READ MORE

Remarks by the President at a Campaign Event

THE PRESIDENT: Hello, Iowa! (Applause.) I don’t know about you, but I’m feeling fired up! (Applause.) I am definitely ready to go! Definitely ready to go. We just had a chance to talk to the folks in the overflow, and before that we were in Newton. And I was just telling my team, there’s something about coming to Iowa — (applause) — it just gets me going! (Applause.) It’s my home away from home. (Applause.) Just love this place! Even just all those long drives. (Laughter.) Seeing all that corn — makes me feel good. (Applause.)

So, listen, I want to thank a couple of Iowa friends of mine — first of all, your outstanding former governor and now outstanding Secretary of Agriculture, Tom Vilsack is in the house. (Applause.) Your Mayor, Frank Cownie is here. (Applause.) Your Congressman, Leonard Boswell. (Applause.) Your Attorney General and one of my campaign co-chairs, Tom Miller. (Applause.) Your State Treasurer and one of my earliest supporters, Mike Fitzgerald. (Applause.)

And I also want to thank some folks who’ve been keeping us fired up from the very beginning — the Isiserettes who are in the house. (Applause.) We were talking about when we had the J.J. dinner, we were all going in together, and the Isiserettes were at the front. And Michelle and I were dancing — she was dancing, I was trying to dance. (Laughter.)

So it’s good to be back. It’s good to be back among friends. It’s good to be seeing all of you. (Applause.) Four or five years ago, it was you who kept us going when a lot of pundits in Washington had written us off. You remember that. It was on your front porches, it was in your backyards where our movement for change began.

AUDIENCE MEMBER: We love you, Mr. President!

THE PRESIDENT: I love you back. (Applause.)

AUDIENCE: Four more years! Four more years! Four more years! Four more years!

THE PRESIDENT: You know, it was here where we came together to reclaim the basic bargain that built the largest middle class and the most prosperous nation on Earth. We believe that in America success shouldn’t be determined by the circumstances of your birth. If you’re willing to work hard, you should be able to find a good job. (Applause.) If you’re willing to meet your responsibilities, you should be able to own a home, maybe start a business. You should be able to give your children a better chance than you had — no matter where you came from, no matter what you look like, no matter who you love. (Applause.) That’s what we believe. (Applause.)

And we came together in 2008 because you could tell that our country — or at least the leadership in Washington — had strayed away from these basic values. We had a record surplus that had been squandered on tax cuts for folks who didn’t need them and weren’t even asking for them. Two wars had been waged on a credit card. Wall Street speculators were reaching huge profits, making bets with other people’s money, but it was destabilizing our financial system. Manufacturing was moving offshore. A shrinking number of Americans were doing fantastically well, but a whole lot of people were struggling with falling incomes and rising costs and the slowest job growth in half a century.

And it was a house of cards, and we sensed that. And then right in the middle of the campaign we saw the most destructive crisis since the Great Depression. In the last six months of 2008, while we were still campaigning, nearly 3 million of our neighbors lost their jobs; 800,000 lost their jobs the month I was sworn in — hadn’t seen anything like it since the Great Depression.

And so it was tough. But it turned out Americans were tougher. Folks in Iowa were tougher. (Applause.) We don’t quit. We keep going. And together, we’re fighting our way back. (Applause.)

So when some said we should just let Detroit go bankrupt, we put our money on American workers and the ingenuity of American companies. (Applause.) And today, plants are adding new workers and new shifts, and the American auto industry is firing on all cylinders. Our manufacturers started investing in America again — first time we consistently added manufacturing jobs since the 1990s.

Businesses started getting back to the basics, creating over 4 million new jobs in the last 26 months — more than 1 million in the last six months alone. (Applause.) Here in Iowa, farmers, food producers, manufacturers, renewable energy producers — they’re all driving new job growth, showing the resilience and strength of our rural economies.

Now, are we satisfied? Of course not. We’ve still got friends out there, and family who are looking for work. All across America there are homes that are still underwater, too many small businesses still struggling to get financing. States are still laying off teachers and first responders.

This was a deep crisis; it didn’t happen overnight. And we never thought it was going to be solved overnight. We know we have more work to do. But we also know that the last thing we can afford to do is to return to the very same policies that got us into this mess in the first place. (Applause.) Not now. Not with so much at stake. We have come too far to abandon the change that we fought for over these past few years. We’ve got to move forward. We can’t go backward. We’ve got to move forward. (Applause.)

That’s the choice in this election. And that’s why I’m running for a second term as President of the United States — to move this country forward. (Applause.)

Now, my opponent in this election, Governor Romney —

AUDIENCE MEMBERS: Booo —

THE PRESIDENT: Governor Romney is a patriotic American. He’s raised a wonderful family. He should be proud of the great personal success he’s had as a CEO of a large financial firm. There are plenty of good and honest people in that industry, and there’s an important, creative role for it in the free market. But —

AUDIENCE MEMBER: (Inaudible.) (Laughter.)

THE PRESIDENT: But Governor Romney has made his experience as a financial CEO the entire rationale of his candidacy for president. Now, he doesn’t really talk about what he did in Massachusetts. But he does talk about being a business — business guy. Right? He says this gives him a special understanding of what it takes to create jobs and grow the economy — even if he’s unable to offer a single new idea about how to do that, no matter how many times he’s asked about it, he says he knows how to do it. So I think it’s a good idea to look at the way he sees the economy.

Now, the main goal of a financial firm like Governor Romney’s is not to create jobs. And by the way, the people who work at these firms will tell you that’s not their goal. Their main goal is to create wealth for themselves and their investors. (Applause.) That’s part of the American way. That’s fine.

Sometimes, jobs are created in that process. But when maximizing short-term gains for your investors rather than building companies that last is your goal, then sometimes it goes the other way. Workers get laid off. Benefits disappear. Pensions are cut. Factories go dark. In some cases, companies are loaded up with debt — not to make the companies more productive, not to buy new equipment to keep them at the cutting-edge, but just to pay investors. Companies may go bankrupt as a result. Taxpayers may be on the hook to help out on those pensions. Investors walk off with big returns, and working folks get stuck holding the bag.

Now, that may be the job of somebody who’s engaged in corporate buyouts. That’s fine. But that’s not the job of a President. (Applause.) That’s not the President’s job. There may be value for that kind of experience, but it’s not in the White House. (Applause.)

See, the job of a President is to lay the foundation for strong and sustainable broad-based growth — not one where a small group of speculators are cashing in on short-term gains. It’s to make sure that everybody in this country gets a fair shake — (applause) — everybody gets a fair shot, everybody is playing by the same set of rules. (Applause.)

When you’re the President, your job is to look out for the investor and the worker; for the big companies and the small companies; for the health of farmers and small businesspeople and the nurse and the teacher. (Applause.) You’re supposed to be thinking about everybody — and the health of the middle class, and what the future is going to hold for our kids. That’s how I see the economy.

Of course, the worldview that Governor Romney gained from his experience as a financial CEO explains something. It explains why the last time he visited these very same fairgrounds, he famously declared that corporations are people.

AUDIENCE: Booo —

AUDIENCE MEMBER: Corporations aren’t people!

THE PRESIDENT: “Human beings, my friends.” That’s what he said. That’s what he called you. “Human beings, my friends.”

It also explains why, when a woman right here in Iowa shared the story of her financial struggles, he gave her an answer out of an economics textbook. He said, “Our productivity equals our income.” Well, as if she’d have an easier time making it if she would just work harder.

Now, let me tell you something. We believe in the profit motive. We believe that risk-takers and investors should be rewarded. That’s what makes our economy so dynamic. But we also believe everybody should have opportunity. (Applause.) We believe — we think everybody who makes the economy more productive or a company more productive should benefit.

And the problem with our economy isn’t that the American people aren’t productive enough — you’re working harder than ever. Productivity is through the roof. It’s been going up consistently over the last decade. The challenge we face right now — the challenge we’ve faced for over a decade — is that harder work hasn’t led to higher incomes. Bigger profits haven’t led to better jobs. And you can’t solve that problem if you can’t even see that it’s a problem. (Applause.)

And he doesn’t see it’s a problem. And so this experience explains why he is proposing the exact same policies that we already tried in the last decade, the very policies that got us into this mess. He sincerely believes that if CEOs and wealthy investors are getting rich, then the wealth is going to trickle down and the rest of us are going to do well, too. And he is wrong.

You don’t build a strong economy by proposing more tax cuts for corporations that ship jobs and profits overseas. But that’s his plan. (Applause.) You don’t build a strong economy by repealing the rules that are designed to prevent another taxpayer bailout of Wall Street banks. But that’s what he pledges to do, roll those things back. You don’t build a strong economy by offering another budget-busting tax cut skewed to the wealthiest Americans, while raising taxes on 18 million working families. But that’s what he’s proposing. (Applause.)

And then, he and his folks, they’ve got the nerve to go around saying they’re somehow going to bring down the deficit. Economists who have looked at his plan say it would swell our deficits by trillions of dollars, even with the drastic cuts he’s called for in things like education and agriculture and Medicare; even with the drastic cuts to the basic research and technology that have always been the strength of the American economy.

We’re going forward. We’re not going to double down on the same bad ideas that we’ve tried over the last decade. It’s not as if we haven’t tried these things. We tried them. They didn’t work. We’re not going to listen to folks who argue that somehow this time it’s going to be different. I’m here to tell you we were there when we tried them. We remember. We’re not going back. We’re moving this country forward. (Applause.)

And I want to make clear here, it’s not like Democrats don’t have work to do. We’ve got work to do. Government — we have to acknowledge government can’t solve all our problems and it shouldn’t try. I learned from my mom no education policy can take the place of a parent’s love and attention — and sometimes a scolding when you didn’t do your homework. (Applause.) As a young man, when I was working as a community organizer with Catholic churches, they taught me no poverty program can make as much of a difference as neighbors coming together and working together with kindness and commitment. (Applause.)

Not every regulation is smart, not every tax dollar is spent wisely, not every person can be helped who refuses to help themselves. But that’s not an excuse to tell the vast majority of hardworking, responsible Americans they’re on their own; that unless you’re lucky to have parents who can lend you the money, you may not be able to go to college; that even if you pay your premiums every month, you may be out of luck if an insurance company decides to drop your coverage just when you need it most. (Applause.)

That’s not who we are. That’s not how we built America. We built this country together. The Hoover Dam, the Golden Gate Bridge, GI Bill, the moon landing, the Internet — we did those things together. Not to make some small group rich, not to help any single individual, but because we knew that if we made those investments it would provide a framework, a platform for everybody to do well, for everybody to succeed. That’s the true lesson of our past. (Applause.) That’s the right vision for our future. And that’s why I’m running for President of the United States. (Applause.)

I’m running to make sure that by the end of this decade, more of our citizens hold a college degree than any other nation on Earth. (Applause.) I want to help our schools hire and reward the best teachers, especially in math and science. (Applause.) I want to give 2 million more Americans the chance to go to community colleges and learn skills that local businesses are looking for right now. (Applause.) Higher education can’t be a luxury — it is a necessity, and I want everybody to be able to afford it. (Applause.)

That’s the choice in this election. That’s why I’m running for President.

I’m running to make sure the next generation of high-tech innovation and manufacturing takes root in places like Des Moines and Newton and Waterloo. (Applause.) I want to stop rewarding businesses that ship jobs and profits overseas. I want to reward companies that are creating jobs and bringing jobs back here to the United States of America. (Applause.) That’s the choice in this election.

I’m running so we can keep moving forward to a future where we control our own energy. Our dependence on foreign oil is at the lowest point it’s been in 16 years. (Applause.) By the middle of the next decade, our cars will average nearly 55 miles per gallon. (Applause.) Thousands of Americans have jobs — including here in Iowa — because the production of renewable energy has nearly doubled in just three years in this country. (Applause.)

Now is not the time to cut these investments just to keep giving billions in tax giveaways to oil companies. They’ve never been more profitable. Now is the time to double down on biofuels and solar and wind, clean energy that’s never been more promising for our economy and our security and for the safety of the planet. (Applause.) That’s the choice in this election, Iowa.
Now, for the first time in nine years, there are no Americans fighting in Iraq. (Applause.) Osama bin Laden is no longer a threat to this country. (Applause.) Al Qaeda is on the path to defeat, and by 2014, the war in Afghanistan will be over. (Applause.)

And all this was made possible because of the courage and selflessness of our men and women in uniform — (applause) — which is why, on Memorial Day, we’re going to remember them. And I’m going to actually be talking especially about our Vietnam vets. They weren’t honored the way they were supposed to when they came home. (Applause.) And we’re not going to make that mistake again. So as long as I’m Commander-in-Chief, this country will care for our veterans and serve them as well as they’ve served us. (Applause.) Because no one who fights for this country should have to fight for a job, or a roof over their heads when they come home. (Applause.) That’s why I’m running for President.

My opponent has got a different view. He said it was “tragic” to end the war in Iraq. He won’t set a timeline to end the war in Afghanistan. And I have, and I intend to keep it. (Applause.) Because after a decade of war that’s cost us thousands of lives and over a trillion dollars, the nation we need to build is our own. (Applause.) So I want to use — so we’re going to use half of what we’re no longer spending on war to pay down our deficit, and the rest to invest in education and research, to repair our roads and bridges, our runways, our wireless networks. (Applause.)

That’s the choice in this election, Iowa.

I’m running to pay down our debt in a way that’s balanced and responsible. Now, I know Governor Romney came to Des Moines last week; warned about a “prairie fire of debt.” That’s what he said. (Laughter.) But he left out some facts. His speech was more like a cow pie of distortion. (Laughter.) I don’t know whose record he twisted the most — mine or his. (Laughter.)

Now, listen, the debt and the deficit are serious problems and it is true that the depth of the recession added to the debt. A lot more folks were looking for unemployment insurance. A lot fewer folks were paying taxes because they weren’t making money, so that added to the debt. Our efforts to prevent it from becoming a depression — helping the auto industry, making sure that not as many teachers were laid off — all those things added to the debt.

But what my opponent didn’t tell you was that federal spending since I took office has risen at the slowest pace of any President in almost 60 years. (Applause.) By the way, what generally happens — what happens is, the Republicans run up the tab, and then we’re sitting there and they’ve left the restaurant, and then they point and — “Why did you order all those steaks and martinis?” (Laughter.) What he did not also tell you was that after inheriting a $1 trillion deficit, I signed $2 trillion of spending cuts into law.

So now I want to finish the job –- yes, by streamlining government — we’ve got more work to do; yes, by cutting more waste; but also by reforming our tax code so that it is simpler and fairer, and so that it asks the wealthiest Americans to pay a little bit more. (Applause.)

Oh, by the way, something else he didn’t mention, something else he didn’t tell you — he hasn’t told you how he’d paid for a new $5 trillion tax cut which includes a 25 percent tax cut for nearly every millionaire in the country.

AUDIENCE: Boo —

THE PRESIDENT: Five trillion dollars in new tax cuts — that is like trying to put a fire out — a prairie fire with some gasoline. (Applause.)

So we’re not going to do that. I refuse to let that happen to our country. We’re not going to pay for another millionaire’s tax cut by eliminating medical research that’s helping people with cancer and Alzheimer’s disease. We’re not going to pay for it by shortchanging farmers in rural America. We’re not going to pay for it by kicking some kids out of Head Start, or asking students to pay more for college, or eliminating health insurance for millions of poor and elderly, and Americans on disabilities who are all on Medicaid. (Applause.)

And as long as I’m President, we’re not going to allow Medicare to be turned into a voucher that would end the program as we know it. (Applause.) We’re going to reform Medicare not by shifting the cost of care to seniors — that’s easy to do, but it’s wrong. We’re going to reform it by reducing the actual costs of health care, reducing the spending that doesn’t make people healthier. (Applause.) That’s the right thing to do.

On issue after issue, we can’t afford to spend the next four years just going backwards. We don’t need to re-fight the battle we just had over Wall Street reform. That was the right thing to do. We’ve seen how important it is. We don’t need to re-fight the battle we just had over health care reform — having 2.5 million young people stay on their parent’s health insurance — that was the right thing to do. (Applause.) Cutting prescription drug costs for seniors — right thing to do. We’re not going to go back to the days when insurance companies had unchecked power to cancel your policies, or deny you coverage, or charge women differently from men. We’re not going back to that. (Applause.)

We don’t need another political fight about ending a woman’s right to choose, or getting rid of Planned Parenthood — (applause) — or taking away affordable birth control. We don’t need that. (Applause.) I want women to control their own health choices, just like I want my daughters to have the same economic opportunities as my sons. We’re not turning back the clock. (Applause.) We’re not going back there.

We’re not going back to the days when you could be kicked out of the military just because of who you are and who you love. We’re moving forward as a country, where everybody is treated with dignity and respect. Moving forward. (Applause.)

We’re not going to just stand back while $10 million checks are speaking louder than the voices of ordinary citizens in our elections. We recognize that’s a problem.

And it’s time to stop denying citizenship to responsible young people just because they’re the children of undocumented immigrants. (Applause.) Look, you know what, this country is at its best when we harness the God-given talents of every individual, when we hear every voice, when we come together as one American family all striving for the same American Dream. That’s what we’re fighting for. That’s why I’m running for a second term. That’s why I need your help. (Applause.)

You know, let me say this — this election is going to be even closer than the last one. And by the way, the last one was close. People don’t remember — it was close. Everybody remembers Grant Park — it was close. We’re going to have to contend with even more negative ads. We’ve got these super PACs and shadowy special interests, like the ones you’ve been bombarded with. You guys just got hit here in Iowa. We’ll have to overcome more cynicism and nastiness and just some plain foolishness even more than we did the last time.

But the outcome of this election, it’s entirely up to you. I’m going to be working hard. Michelle is out there working hard. (Applause.) But there’s one thing we learned — there’s nothing more powerful than millions of voices calling for change.

Michelle and I, we were talking the other night over dinner, and I told her we were coming back to Iowa, and she said something — it’s absolutely true — she said, I remember back in the first campaign that we would be reading all these news reports and watching the news, and everything looked terrible and everybody was counting us out. And then I’d come to Iowa, and I’d see what was going on, on the ground and I’d be meeting people and talking to people. It wasn’t necessarily that it was a sure thing that we were going to win. But what was being reflected out there, that wasn’t what was happening here. That wasn’t what ordinary folks were thinking.

So she just stopped watching TV — or at least the news part of it. She still watches HDTV and some other things — “Dancing with the Stars.” (Laughter.) But this place taught us that not that we’re always right, not that we don’t make mistakes, but that there’s just a core decency and strength and resilience to the American people, and that, ultimately, the conversations that are going on around kitchen tables and at the VFW hall and in churches, those conversations aren’t what’s reflected in the cable news.

And so, when I look out at this crowd, all these different faces — different ages, different races, different faiths — I’m reminded of that. And when enough of you knock on enough doors and pick up enough phones, and talk to your friends or your neighbors and your coworkers — and you’re doing it respectfully and you’re talking to folks who don’t agree with you, you’re talking to people who are good people, but maybe they don’t have all the information — when you make that happen, when you decide it’s time for change to happen, you know what, change happens. Change comes to America. (Applause.)

It’s always easier to be cynical. It’s always easier to say nothing can change, especially after we’ve gone through such a tough time. And despite all the changes we’ve made, despite all the good things we’ve done, things are still tough. And so, the other side, they are going to try and play on that sense that, well, things aren’t perfect, Congress is still arguing, the politics is still polarized. But you’re the antidote to that.

And that’s the spirit we need again. So if people ask you what this campaign is about, you tell them, yes, it’s still about hope. It is still about change. It’s still about ordinary folks who believe that in the face of great odds, we can make a difference in the life of this country. (Applause.) Don’t let them tell you different. (Applause.)

You proved it in 2008. Without you — I look around this place, I see folks who were out there knocking on doors and making things happen — I would not have had the privilege of being your President. You were the first ones to make this country believe we could still come together around a common purpose. (Applause.)

And I still believe that today. I still believe that we’re not as divided as our politics suggest. I still believe we have more in common than the experts tell us. I still believe we’re not Democrats or Republicans first, we are Americans first. (Applause.)

I still believe in you. And I want you to keep believing in me. (Applause.) Some of you remember — because I’ve spent a lot of time here, I used to go around and I would tell you — I warned you and if you weren’t listening, Michelle would tell you — I warned you I’m not a perfect man and I wouldn’t be a perfect President. But what I told you was I promised you I would always tell you what I thought and I’d always tell you where I stood, even when it politically wasn’t convenient. And I would wake up every single day, fighting as hard as I know how for you and your families and your children’s future.

And, Iowa, I have kept that promise. I have kept that promise. (Applause.) And I will keep it as long as I have the honor of being your President. So if you’re willing to stick with me and fight with me and press on with me, and if you’re willing to work even harder than you did the last time, we’ll move this country forward and we’ll finish what we started. And we’ll remind the world just why it is America is the greatest nation on Earth.